APEX OF MAN AND APES’ DESTINY REVEALED IN “WAR FOR THE PLANET OF THE APES”

The groundbreaking technological action adventure blockbuster franchise “Planet of the Apes” returns with alpha ape Caesar meeting his most formidable foe in the third chapter “War for the Planet of the Apes” that will open in Philippine cinemas on July 12.

From the first contemporary reboot of the franchise in “Rise of the Planet of the Apes” (2011), the very first live-action film in the history of movies to star, and be told from the point of view of, a sentient (ape) animal, Caesar grew up under the care of his human friend Will (played by James Franco) after being saved in the facility where he was born. Caesar became a super-intelligent chimpanzee who at a young age sees humans as being capable of wonderful things, like art and reason. And then he begins to see humanity’s dark side – oppression, bigotry, and the ostracizing of his species. Caesar ended up liberating all the other primates from captivity. What transpired next in “Dawn of the Planet of the Apes” (2014) cemented Caesar’s place as the leader of a growing nation of genetically evolved apes that are threatened by a band of human survivors. Humans and apes soon reach a fragile peace in “Dawn”, but it proved short-lived, as both sides are brought to the brink of a war that will determine who will emerge as Earth’s dominant species.

Now, in “War for the Planet of the Apes,” the latest instalment of the arresting action adventure franchise directed by Matt Reeves, Caesar (played in performance capture by award-winning Andy Serkis) goes head to head with his army against the Colonel’s (Woody Harrelson, “Hunger Games”) powerful armada fighting the ultimate battle of survival and reign over earth. Caesar, an intrinsically benevolent ape as seen in previous early materials for the release of “War for the Planet of the Apes” warns that war has begun, even apologizing that such imminence came to be. Conflicted with empathy for humans and the survival of his community, Caesar is then forced into battle leading his pack against humans.

“As this story starts, there is no more peace with humans, which thrusts Caesar into a deeply emotional, universal kind of conflict,” director Matt Reeves describes. “Caesar has always been unique in that he is part ape, part human, yet neither one fully. The hope has been that he might be able to bridge the two societies, but now it is clear that this will not come to pass. What’s so exciting is that in exploring Caesar’s internal dilemmas at this profound moment it becomes a chance to look at a battle we all know: the war between our intelligence, our empathy and our instinctiveness, and how that forms what defines our humanity. At the same time as this is a very dark journey, it is also a story with so much spirit in it.”